News

Tasmania might be the fattest, oldest and overall sickest state in Australia, but it doesn't have to be! We were honoured to be recognised at the 2018 Launceston Chamber of Commerce Business Excellence Awards by winning the inaugural 'Health Entrepreneur' award. Click through to read the article that featured in the Examiner

There was cake, party poppers, and push ups as Active Launceston celebrated it’s 10th birthday in 2018. Active Launceston launched in 2008 as a community driven partnership striving to improve the health and wellbeing of Launceston residents. Southern Cross, WIN and the Examiner joined in our celebration of the program in October 2018. Click through to read the article that featured in the Examiner Newspaper.

When the Ravenswood Men's and Community Shed was formed in June 2017, the door was opened for a program aimed at improving health outcomes in the community. The Healthy Shed program met this call with a launch in 2018 providing 14 free sessions to the community and shed members. We were delighted the program received wide recognition from local radio, Southern Cross, WIN and the Examiner. Click through to read the article that featured in the Examiner

Make your media pitch stand out amongst the noise

Monday, 27 August 20180927

I love music. Everything about it makes me happy. One of the things I love to do is watch a band or put on an album and listen out for just one of the instruments. You tried this? I love to pick out the bass lines. To me, the bass is like that loyal friend that everyone needs, but is often forgotten. To pick out the bass I find I really have to focus because there is a big complex noise booming out at me but I’m just trying to follow one part of that; one angle of the music..... turns out, watching a band and watching my inbox are pretty similar past times. Click read more to find out why.

Back at the beginning of 2018 we were contacted by Tasmanian superstar Rosie Martin who you might know as the 2017 Tasmanian Australian of the Year for her work teaching literacy and communication to prisioners. Rosie asked us to contribute a short article that would outline how poor literacy skills affects the people we work with day to day. Our article makes up just part of a huge body of work that Rosie has pooled together for a project called Communicating: The Heart of Literacy. It's a public dialogue about communication, literacy, enablement, collaboration, and relational trust and we'd encourage you to head to www.chattermatters.com.au to read some incredible Tasmanian stories. Recently our article appeared in The Mercury - click through to have a read.